DrPizza
Administrator Elite Member Goat Whisperer
I don't think they'll ever be commonplace. What would people print? There is very little need for printing all plastic things, except perhaps for hobbyists. A few people have mentioned printing replacement parts. Uh, no. The majority of people aren't that mechanically inclined. There was a thread the other day about the circuit board for someone's oven burning out. He used solder to (temporarily, I hope) rebuild the traces on the circuit board that were melted away. Think about the other students in college - not your fellow engineers - the liberal arts majors. MAYBE 1 in 20 could have gotten the circuit board out - and only a fraction of them would/could have rebuilt those traces. <note to self, remember to take soldering iron to the school Tuesday to repair the timing system in the swimming pool.>
The majority of replacement parts cannot be fabricated from just plastic. At one time or another, I've repaired just about every common type of home appliance. I've repaired every type of restaurant equipment in the pizza shop I worked at - large 3-phase mixers, large pizza ovens, warmers, walk-in cooler, you name it. I can't think of a single time that I had to order a part that was all plastic, or that could be made all plastic. Any thing else that I fixed was something incredibly cheap like a switch plate - not worth the cost of maintaining a printer for one part a year that's available at the hardware store for $.50.
So, what's an average person going to print? A new spatula for cooking? Again, you can probably pick up a better quality one for $1 at the dollar store than you can print.
Edit: maybe some enterprising individual will open a shop where he fabricates replacement parts for people by printing them out. Good luck.
The majority of replacement parts cannot be fabricated from just plastic. At one time or another, I've repaired just about every common type of home appliance. I've repaired every type of restaurant equipment in the pizza shop I worked at - large 3-phase mixers, large pizza ovens, warmers, walk-in cooler, you name it. I can't think of a single time that I had to order a part that was all plastic, or that could be made all plastic. Any thing else that I fixed was something incredibly cheap like a switch plate - not worth the cost of maintaining a printer for one part a year that's available at the hardware store for $.50.
So, what's an average person going to print? A new spatula for cooking? Again, you can probably pick up a better quality one for $1 at the dollar store than you can print.
Edit: maybe some enterprising individual will open a shop where he fabricates replacement parts for people by printing them out. Good luck.
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